NEW YORK (Feb. 22, 2013) — Since its inception in July 2001, 47 fighters who’ve appeared on ShoBox: The New Generation have gone on to capture a world title.
One of them,
Cornelius “K9” Bundrage (32-4, 19 KO’s), of Detroit, will defend his IBF Junior Middleweight World Championship against fellow
ShoBox alum,
Ishe “Sugar Shay” Smith (24-5, 11 KO’s), of Las Vegas,
tomorrow/Saturday,
Feb. 23, live on
SHOWTIME® (9:00 p.m. ET/PT, delayed on the West Coast) from the
Masonic Temple Theatre in
Detroit.
Bundrage fought twice on
ShoBox, and in his most recent start, on a Special Edition of the critically acclaimed series, he retained the 154-pound world title with a seventh-round knockout win over former titleholder
Cory Spinks in a rematch on June 30, 2012.
But it was his “double-knockdown” fight against southpaw
Sechew Powell in his
ShoBox debut on May 6, 2005 that will be forever etched in fans’ memories. Both fighters were knocked down simultaneously in the bout’s opening seconds. They each got up immediately, then Powell scored another knockdown with a left hand. Bundrage got up, but stumbled across the ring and fell. He got up again, but stumbled across the ring and fell again. The official time of the fight was 0:22.
“The premise on
ShoBox has always been to match prospects tough and when ‘K9’ fought Powell, both were unbeaten,”
ShoBox Executive Producer
Gordon Hall said. “Bundrage was 21-0 going in, Powell 15-0 at the time. Because of the double knockdown, their fight was one of the most memorable in
ShoBox history.
“That ‘K9’ is defending against Ishe Smith on Saturday is a great thing. It’s always neat to have a
ShoBox fighter who’s gone on to win a title come back to the network and defend it.”
A resilient Bundrage has gone 8-3-1 since the “double-knockdown” fight, including fighting four times during his stint on
The Contender reality show in 2006 and capturing the IBF Junior Middleweight Title with a fifth-round technical knockout win over Spinks in their first fight on Aug. 7, 2010. In his outing before last, in his first defense, “K9” avenged the loss to Powell by winning a dominant 12-round decision on June 25, 2011.
“We could do
ShoBox for 100 years and that 22-second double knockdown between Powell and ‘K9’ will always be front and center in terms of memories,” said boxing historian and
ShoBox expert analyst
Steve Farhood. “Given that K-9 suffered that type of loss, and then went on to lose in the semis of Season Two of
The Contender, it tells you a lot about his character that he still advanced to become a world champion.”
The double-knockdown loss taught “K9” an invaluable lesson, one that served him well in his career since. “I learned that I have to exercise patience,” he said. “I just try and get better and compete, but the whole key is patience and not getting overly anxious.
“When I fought Powell the first time, I had an associate tell me that he would give me 10 grand for a first-round knockout, so I went for it, but became too anxious and it cost me,” Bundrage said. “At that time, I’d been very active, the most active in my career, so it seemed like a good idea. Turns out it was a terrible decision on my part, but I learned, the hardest way, that I had to fight a with a little more patience, that no matter where I am fighting or who it’s against, anything can happen and that no one is invincible.
“That was the first loss of my life. I came up from the streets. I grew up in the streets but I’d never lost a fight on the streets, so the loss to Powell really took a lot out of me. It humbled me, but my faith got me through. I grew up in the church. I prayed that I could get back on TV again and God granted my wish to be on TV again. The whole thing is, I’d taken the fight with Powell because I wanted to get on TV, and God granted my wish. Right after the Powell fight, I was on
The Contender and I’ve had nothing but big fights since.
“Looking back, I see now that it just wasn’t time for me to be where I’m at now, on God’s time and a champion of the world. Now I’m back on SHOWTIME where it all began for me. Thanks to God, and I give all glory to Him. I’ve come full circle.”
Smith, who is seeking to become the first Las Vegas-born boxing world champion, is 4-1 on
ShoBox and 1-0 on SHOWTIME EXTREME.
“Ishe was one of many top up and coming prospects who passed their early tests on
ShoBox,” Hall recalls. “First, he defeated
Sam Garr and
David Estrada and then he beat future World Champion
Randall Bailey. That got him on
The Contender in 2004. Four years later, he came back to
ShoBox not as a prospect but as a veteran playing the spoiler role and resurrected his career by upsetting the undefeated favorite
Pawel Wolak (21-0 going in) in Wolak’s backyard (Brooklyn, N.Y.).”
Smith credits
ShoBox for keeping his topsy-turvy career relevant.
“If not for
ShoBox I wouldn’t be where I am today,” he said. “Since my first fight on
ShoBox in early 2003, they have always had my back, they have always backed me even when other networks would not approve me for certain opponents, when no one else would give me a chance.
“Really, the entire
ShoBox family has been great to me;
Nick Charles rest in peace, Steve Farhood, everybody. They have always treated me like family and I feel the same way about them. When Nick, a loveable guy who always showed me so much respect, died, it was as hard on me as it was on them.
ShoBox has really been a staple of my career and I thank them for that. It’s awesome getting my first title shot on SHOWTIME. It will almost be 10 years to the day from my first fight on
ShoBox.”
Smith is coming off of a lopsided 10-round decision victory over
Irving Garcia on SHOWTIME EXTREME on Sept. 8, 2012. His lone loss on
ShoBox came in a close decision to then-undefeated southpaw and now world title challenger
Fernando Guerrero on July 16, 2010, a result Smith disputes to this day. “I should be unbeaten on
ShoBox,” he said. “I definitely felt I did enough to win against Guerrero.”
Regarding Saturday’s matchup, Farhood, who has called every
ShoBox fight, said, “Given how long ago both of these fighters debuted on
ShoBox, it says tons about both of them that we find them at this level in 2013 fighting in a world title fight.
“I’m so happy Ishe is getting his first title shot because whether he’s won or lost, he’s always given such a great effort on SHOWTIME. He has said many times that he defines himself as a SHOWTIME fighter. He could easily be unbeaten on
ShoBox. I scored the Guerrero fight in his favor.”
Fans can expect both veterans to lay it on the line on Saturday.
“I’m really looking forward to Saturday and I thank everyone involved for making the fight happen,” Bundrage said. “I’ve been around this game a long time. This is a great opportunity. Tell Ishe, he’d better be ready. The Dog is coming.”
Smith says he’ll be prepared for anything. “I have no expectations on what to expect,” he said. “Our motto in camp has been to get the win by any means necessary. It’s been a long road, but it’s just awesome and only fitting that I am getting this world title shot on SHOWTIME. I plan to make the most of it and bring the title back to Las Vegas.”
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Bundrage vs. Smith, a 12-round fight for Bundrage’s IBF Junior Middleweight World Championship, will take place tomorrow/Saturday, February 23 at the Masonic Temple Theatre in Detroit, Michigan. The event is promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Mayweather Promotions, sponsored by Corona and MGM Grand Detroit and will be televised live on SHOWTIME beginning at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT (delayed on the West Coast). The co-main event will be a 10-round middleweight bout between Detroit’s undefeated rising star J’Leon Love and Derrick Findley of Gary, Indiana.
Tickets priced at $200, $125, $100, $75, $50 and $25, plus applicable taxes, fees and services charges are on sale at the Masonic Temple box office, online at
www.ticketmaster.com, all Ticketmaster locations or by calling 800-745-3000.
The historic Masonic Temple in downtown Detroit was dedicated on November 25, 1926. With 1,037 rooms and 550,000 square feet, and built to house numerous fraternal organizations, it is the largest structure of its kind in the world. This amazing Gothic building was constructed between 1920 and 1926 at a cost of $7 million. George Washington’s own working tools were used to spread the first mortar for the cornerstone. Washington, who was a Freemason used these same tools to lay the cornerstone of the Capitol build
ing in Washington DC.
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